<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>A LETTER TO THE GIRLS.</h2>
<p class="left45">
<span class="smcap">Mandarin, Fla</span>., Feb. 13, 1872.</p>
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<p>ES, the girls! Let me see: who are
they? I mean <i>you</i>, Nellie, and Mary,
and Emily, and Charlotte, and Gracie,
and Susie, and Carry, and Kitty, and you
of every pretty name, my charming little Pussy
Willow friends! Dear souls all, I bless your
bright eyes, and fancy you about me as a sort
of inspiration to my writing. I could wish you
were every one here. Don't you wish that
"The Arabian Nights" were true? and that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</SPAN></span>
there were really little square bits of enchanted
carpet, on which one has only to sit down
and pronounce two cabalistic words, and away
one goes through the air, sailing off on visits?
Then, girls, wouldn't we have a nice wide bit
of carpet? and wouldn't we have the whole
bright flock of you come fluttering down
together to play croquet with us under the
orange-trees this afternoon? And, while you
were waiting for your turns to come, you should
reach up and pull down a bough, and help yourselves
to oranges; or you should join a party
now going out into the pine-woods to gather
yellow jessamine. To-day is mail-day; and, as
the yellow jessamine is in all its glory, the girls
here are sending little boxes of it North to their
various friends through the mail. They have
just been bringing in long wreaths and clusters
of it for me to look at, and are consulting how
to pack it. Then this afternoon, when we have
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</SPAN></span>
done croquet, it is proposed that we form a party
to visit Aunt Katy, who lives about two miles
away in the pine-woods, "over on Julington" as
the people here say. "On Julington" means on
a branch of the St. John's named Julington
Creek, although it is as wide as the Connecticut
River at Hartford. We put the oldest mule to
an old wagon, and walk and ride alternately;
some of us riding one way, and some the other.</p>
<p>The old mule, named Fly, is a worn-out,
ancient patriarch, who, having worked all his
days without seeing any particular use in it, is
now getting rather misanthropic in his old age,
and obstinately determined not to put one foot
before the other one bit faster than he is actually
forced to do. Only the most vigorous urging
can get him to step out of a walk, although we
are told that the rogue has a very fair trot at his
command. If any of the darky tribe are behind
him, he never thinks of doing any thing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</SPAN></span>
but pricking up his ears, and trotting at a decent
pace; but, when only girls and women are to the
fore, down flop his ears, down goes his head,
and he creeps obstinately along in the aforementioned
contemplative manner, looking, for all
the world, like a very rough, dilapidated old hair-trunk
in a state of locomotion.</p>
<p>Well, I don't blame him, poor brute! Life, I
suppose, is as much a mystery to him as to the
philosophers; and he has never been able to
settle what it is all about, this fuss of being
harnessed periodically to impertinent carts, and
driven here and there, for no valuable purpose
that he can see.</p>
<p>Such as he is, Fly is the absolute property of
the girls and women, being past farm-work; and
though he never willingly does any thing but
walk, yet his walk is considerably faster than
that of even the most agile of us, and he is by
many degrees better than nothing. He is admitted
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</SPAN></span>
on all hands to be a <i>safe</i> beast, and will
certainly never run away with any of us.</p>
<p>As to the choice of excursions, there are
several,—one to our neighbor Bowens to see
sugar-making, where we can watch the whole
process, from the grinding of the cane through
the various vats and boilers, till at last we see
the perfected sugar in fine, bright, straw-colored
crystals in the sugar-house. We are hospitably
treated to saucers of lovely, amber-colored sirup
just on the point of crystallization,—liquid
sugar-candy,—which, of course, we do not turn
away from. Then, again, we can go down the
banks of the river to where our neighbor Duncan
has cleared up a little spot in what used
to be virgin forest, and where now a cosey little
cottage is beginning to peep through its many
windows upon the river-view. Here a bright
little baby—a real little Florida flower—has
lately opened a pair of lovely eyes, and is growing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</SPAN></span>
daily in grace and favor. In front of this cottage,
spared from the forest, are three great stately
magnolias, such trees as you never saw. Their
leaves resemble those of the India-rubber tree,—large,
and of a glossy, varnished green. They
are evergreen, and in May are covered with
great white blossoms, something like pond-lilies,
and with very much the same odor. The trees
at the North called magnolias give no idea whatever
of what these are. They are giants among
flowers; seem worthy to be trees of heaven.</p>
<p>Then there are all sorts of things to be got
out of the woods. There are palmetto-leaves to
be pressed and dried, and made into fans; there
is the long wire-grass, which can be sewed into
mats, baskets, and various little fancy articles,
by busy fingers. Every day brings something
to explore the woods for: not a day in winter
passes that you cannot bring home a reasonable
little nosegay of flowers. Many of the flowers
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</SPAN></span>
here do not have their seasons, but seem to bloom
the year round: so that, all the time, you are sure
of finding something. The woods now are full
of bright, delicate ferns that no frosts have
touched, and that spring and grow perennially.
The book of Nature here is never shut and
clasped with ice and snow as at the North; and,
of course, we spend about half our time in the
open air.</p>
<p>The last sensation of our circle is our red-bird.
We do not approve of putting free birds
in cages; but Aunt Katy brought to one of our
party such a beautiful fellow, so brilliant a red,
with such a smart, black crest on his head, and
such a long, flashing red tail, that we couldn't
resist the desire to keep him a little while, just
to look at him. Aunt Katy insisted that he
wouldn't take it to heart; that he would be tame
in a few days, and eat out of our hands: in
short, she insisted that he would consider himself
a fortunate bird to belong to us.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Aunt Katy, you must know, is a nice old lady.
We use that term with a meaning; for, though
"black as the tents of Kedar," she is a perfect
lady in her manners: she was born and
brought up, and has always lived, in this
neighborhood, and knows every bird in the
forest as familiarly as if they were all her own
chickens; and she has great skill in getting them
to come to her to be caught.</p>
<p>Well, our red-bird was named Phœbus, of a
kind that Audubon calls a cardinal-grossbeak;
and a fine, large, roomy cage was got down for
him, which was of old tenanted by a very merry
and rackety cat-bird; and then the question
arose, "What shall we do with him?" For you
see, girls, having a soft place in our heart for all
pets, instead of drowning some of our kittens in
the fall, as reasonable people should, we were
seduced by their gambols and their prettiness to
let them all grow up together; and the result is,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</SPAN></span>
that we have now in our domestic retinue four
adult cats of most formidable proportions.
"These be the generations" of our cats: first,
Liz, the mother; second, Peter, her oldest son;
third, Anna and Lucinda, her daughters. Peter
is a particularly martial, combative, obnoxious
beast, very fluffy and fussy, with great, full-moon,
yellow eyes, and a most resounding,
sonorous voice. There is an immense deal of
cat in Peter. He is concentrated cathood, a
nugget of pure cat; and in fact we are all a
little in awe of him. He rules his mother and
sisters as if he had never heard of Susan
Anthony and Mrs. Stanton. Liz, Anna, and
Lucinda are also wonderfully-well-developed cats,
with capital stomachs. Now comes the problem:
the moment the red-bird was let into his
cage, there was an instant whisk of tails, and a
glare of great yellow eyes, and a sharpening of
eye-teeth, that marked a situation. The Scripture
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</SPAN></span>
tells us a time is coming when the lion shall
lie down with the lamb; but that time hasn't
come in Florida. Peter is a regular heathen,
and hasn't the remotest idea of the millennium.
He has much of the lion in him; but he never
could lie down peaceably with the lamb, unless
indeed the lamb were inside of him, when he
would sleep upon him without a twinge of conscience.
Unmistakably we could see in his eyes
that he considered Phœbus as caught for his
breakfast; and he sat licking his chops inquiringly,
as who should ask, "When will the cloth
be laid, and things be ready?"</p>
<p>Now, the party to whom the red-bird was
given is also the patron-saint, the "guide, philosopher,
and friend," of the cats. It is she who
examines the plates after each meal, and treasures
fragments, which she cuts up and prepares
for their repast with commendable regularity. It
is she who presides and keeps order at cat-meals;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</SPAN></span>
and forasmuch as Peter, on account of
his masculine strength and rapacity, is apt to get
the better of his mother and sisters, she picks
him up, and bears him growling from the board,
when he has demolished his own portion, and is
proceeding to eat up theirs.</p>
<p>Imagine, now, the cares of a woman with four
cats and a bird on her mind! Phœbus had to
be carefully pinned up in a blanket the first
night; then the cage was swung by strong cords
from the roof of the veranda. The next morning,
Peter was found perched on top of it, glaring
fiendishly. The cage was moved along; and
Peter scaled a pillar, and stationed himself at the
side. To be sure, he couldn't get the bird, as
the slats were too close for his paw to go
through; but poor Phœbus seemed wild with
terror. Was it for this he left his native wilds,—to
be exposed in a prison to glaring, wild-eyed
hyenas and tigers?
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The cats were admonished, chastised,
"scat"-ed, through all the moods and tenses;
though their patroness still serves out their
commons regularly, determined that they shall
not have the apology of empty stomachs.
Phœbus is evidently a philosopher,—a bird of
strong sense. Having found, after two or three
days' trial, that the cats can't get him; having
clusters of the most delicious rice dangling from
the roof of his cage, and fine crisp lettuce verdantly
inviting through the bars,—he seems to
have accepted the situation; and, when nobody
is in the veranda, he uplifts his voice in song.
"What cheer! what cheer!" he says, together
with many little twitters and gurgles for which we
have no musical notes. Aunt Katy promises to
bring him a little wife before long; and, if that
be given him, what shall hinder him from being
happy? As April comes in, they shall build
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</SPAN></span>
their nest in the cage, and give us a flock of
little red-birds.</p>
<p>Well, girls, we are making a long letter; and
this must do for this week.</p>
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<ANTIMG src="images/i005.jpg" width-obs="550" height-obs="369" alt="A Water-Coach" /></div>
<h2>A WATER-COACH, AND A RIDE IN IT.</h2>
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